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| <nettime> net*&%$!art digest [thomas, hopkins, turgeon] |
Re: <nettime> net?art survey
"clement Thomas" <ctgr@free.fr>
John Hopkins <jhopkins@uiah.fi>
david turgeon <david.t@steam.ca>
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From: "clement Thomas" <ctgr@free.fr>
Subject: Re: [thingist] net?art survey
Date: Thu, 7 Mar 2002 16:40:06 +0100
http://www.net-art.org
watch your back !
http://www.NNet-art.org
----- Original Message -----
from: "Nino Rodriguez" <nino@pobox.com>
to: <list@rhizome.org>; <thingist@bbs.thing.net>; <nettime@bbs.thing.net>
sent: Thursday, March 07, 2002 3:10 PM
subject: [thingist] net?art survey
> So which is it?
<...>
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Date: Thu, 7 Mar 2002 09:45:47 -0700
From: John Hopkins <jhopkins@uiah.fi>
Subject: Re: <nettime> net?art survey
>So which is it?
It's
> netart (Tate)
> "an impromptu portrait of online spirituality"
> net.art (Walker)
> "Just click on a hyperlinked area to start"
> net-art (Whitney)
>"a trippy online experience"
> net art (Documenta)
> "a blend of acid-trip visuals and tech-nerd inventiveness"
isn't it?
jh
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Date: Thu, 07 Mar 2002 14:33:55 -0500
From: david turgeon <david.t@steam.ca>
Subject: Re: <nettime> net?art survey
>So which is it?
> netart
> net.art
> net-art
> net art
basically the question is: what meaning does punctuation have? a dot used
to mean something purely utilitarian such as "this sentence stops" or "this
is an abbreviation". OO programming, & internet addressing, use dots in
new contexts (they denote a hierarchy), so it doesn't seem so unusual to
call something "net.art" although using periods is a "wrong" way to form a
neologism. in this sense "net-art" is more correct but it is (to me) far
more awkward (& perhaps inaccurate because of its obsolescence) than "net
art" or "netart" which both seem more flexible.
another interesting aspect of the use of the dot in "net.art" is that it
somehow turns the internet naming hierarchy on its head. a correct
internet address should be "art.net", so "net.art" gives the feeling that
it's the network that runs through art rather than the other way
around. on the other hand, if we follow OO conventions, we get the method
"art" as an element of the object "net", which is more cynical than the
previous interpretation. on the other hand, it implies that "art" would
exist in other contexts: kitchen.art, computer.art, land.art... it posits
"art" as a transient property of everything.
perhaps the period is eventually going to replace the hyphen in our
vocabulary. stranger things have happened. we can also think of a
language where words can be lumped together with dots, as with OO
programming, but i'll leave that to the scholars out there.
with all that being said, personally i have a fondness for the variety of
spellings, & i would find it a waste to make one of them "official."
have a nice day
~ david
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